From: ephemeral@ephemeralfic.org
Date: 2 Apr 2005 00:01:02 -0000
Subject: NEW: Outpost by bardsmaid by bardsmaid
Source: direct

Reply To: bardsmaid@imagesmithstudio.com


TITLE:  Outpost 
AUTHOR: bardsmaid 
FEEDBACK: stokes the fires of creativity.  
Welcomed and invited in for tea at: 
bardsmaid@imagesmithstudio.com
DISTRIBUTION: Yes, but please keep my 
headers attached and let me know where it 
is
SPOILERS:  none 
RATING: worksafe 
CLASSIFICATION: Vignette
KEYWORDS: Krycek, Scully
DISCLAIMER: The X-files characters are 
the creations of Chris Carter and 1013 
Productions.  No infringement is 
intended; no profit is being made.
MANY THANKS: to Spica for irreplaceable, 
trusty beta 
SUMMARY: A dusty outpost in the post-Col 
world.  A glass of water; a slice of 
lemon.  A moment's respite from the work 
of fighting the occupation.
............................

OUTPOST



Krycek half-smirks and shakes his head.  
It's the post-invasion world's version of 
the Star Wars cantina, he thinks as he 
glances at the scruffy bunch of people 
who fill the room around him.  But he's 
not complaining; it's good these days 
just to be alive.  He takes another sip 
of his beer, an improvised brew, and 
glances at his watch.  He'll wait another 
twenty minutes before he goes out looking 
for her.  Likely he won't have to, 
though.  She's prompt and efficient and 
he likes that.

A few minutes later a glancing flash of 
light off the front door announces a 
newcomer to the cafe.  Krycek looks up to 
see a small female silhouette that, as it 
approaches, takes on the color and 
features of Dana Scully.  She slides into 
the booth on the side opposite him and 
pauses a moment to take in her 
surroundings.

"So," he says, waiting a beat and then 
pushing a glass of water toward her with 
two fingers.  "Did it go okay?"  

"Yes."  She reaches for the glass, takes 
the lemon wedge from the rim and squeezes 
it into the clear liquid, then takes a 
long drink.  Her T-shirt is dusty, a 
souvenir of the red dirt roads she's 
driven today.  She looks up at him.  "Dr. 
Borin's theory was right.  *Mulder's* 
theory was r--"  She stops mid-word.  

He watches her face for nuances, clues.  
Her features seem to relax.  

"He was right," she repeats, more quietly 
this time, then looks up at him, her 
blue-gray eyes surprisingly clear and 
strong.

He finds himself glancing away.  To his 
left, a table is being moved out of the 
way in the corner of the room.  
Overlaying the scene, on a thin, 
transparent memory-layer, he kneels 
beside a near-dead Mulder, stroking his 
shoulder and repeating something intended 
to be soothing, wondering if enough of 
the man still remains inside the torn 
body to even hear his pathetic attempt 
at... what?  After all this time he's 
still not sure what he'd meant to say.

Krycek lets out a half-held breath, 
brings his attention back to the woman 
sitting across from him.  "You okay?" he 
asks.

She starts to look away--an instinctive 
defense--but manages to catch herself.  
The barest hint of a smile lights her 
face.  "Yes, actually.  Actually I think 
I'm finally starting to come to some 
sense of... maybe not peace.  Resolution, 
at least."  Her mouth sits half-open, as 
if she has more to say.  Finally she 
closes it.  End of story.  

"You must be hungry," he says, nodding 
toward a handwritten menu lying beside 
the empty napkin dispenser.  

"Thank you.  I am."  

She takes it and starts to study her 
options; Krycek studies her.  Ever since 
they crossed paths six months after 
Mulder's death, they've been working 
together, a couple of free agents 
tracking down a renegade consortium 
scientist whose genetically-altered test 
subjects have been aiding the Invasion.  
Considering the bad blood flowing through 
their past they've ended up doing 
surprisingly well together; who would 
have thought?  But both of them are 
focused, quiet, determined, neither one 
prone to the kind of emotionalism that 
pulls people away from the task at hand.

Scully's finger trails down the list.  
She reaches for her glass, takes a sip, 
stops abruptly, the glass in mid-air, and 
scans the other tables.  In the far 
corner, Krycek notices a man with a 
guitar case unpacking his instrument and 
setting it on a bar stool.  Soon he's 
joined by a woman with a fiddle and a 
second man with a set of bongos.

"Krycek--"

He glances back to catch Scully eyeing 
him skeptically.

"They aren't serving lemon slices with 
the water here, are they?"

"Uh, no."  Heat flushes his face.  He 
nods toward the remainder of the lemon, 
which he's stashed beside the salt and 
pepper shakers.  "Got it off a dead 
alien."  He shoots her a grin.  "Found it 
in the refrigerator in Pease's office.  I 
know how much you like them."

"Thank you," she says, and goes back to 
studying the listings on the menu.  

There was a point when he wouldn't have 
believed Scully could ever face him 
without a truckload of negativity.  But 
maybe they'd both realized their personal 
feelings would only trip them up, making 
the work impossible.  On some level maybe 
they'd buried the hatchet for Mulder's 
sake: after the sacrifice he'd made, to 
score one last victory for him in 
overtime after the buzzer had sounded.  
Whatever.  And he'd been the perfect 
gentleman: not baiting Scully, not 
crowding her--just keeping things clean 
and workable and looking out for her from 
a distance.

"I give up," Scully says, looking up.  
"What did you have?"  

"The pork stew's pretty good.  No 
guarantee it's actually pork"--he shrugs-
-"but I figure after nearly an hour if my 
stomach's not sending out any warning 
signals, it should be safe."

"Sounds good enough for me.  I think I'll 
have it."  She waves the waitress over to 
the table and places her order.  Off in 
the corner the guitar player is tuning 
up, plucking at strings and tightening 
pegs.

Scully takes another sip of her water and 
relaxes against the quilted back of the 
booth.  

"Aren't you going to ask me how my day 
went?" Krycek drawls, putting on a 
pseudo-casual air.  But there's a 
huckster's slickness to his delivery and 
she spots it immediately.

"What?"  Her eyes widen.  "You mean you 
were able to--?"

He reaches into the pocket of his jacket 
and pulls out two computer disks.  "The 
good doctor's son having a crisis of 
conscience.  I'm pretty sure what he's 
given us here is just a starter, Scully.  
With a little convincing we should be 
able to get him to lay out Daddy's whole 
web of connections."

"My god."  Scully's hand flies to her 
mouth.  Hope flickers to life in her 
eyes.  "If we can access his lab data, 
we'll have a defense against those men.  
Krycek, we could--"  She swallows, as if 
the alien onslaught has been a physical 
obstruction in her throat these two long 
years.

"Bingo." 

She smiles in reply, too broadly to hold 
it back, which makes her color self-
consciously.  For the first time in 
longer than he can remember she looks 
alive.  It makes her beautiful.

He looks away.  

The guitarist and the bongo player have 
started in on something with a Latin 
beat--lively--and the woman with the 
fiddle is working at improvising 
appropriate accents to the music.  Likely 
she's never played with them before but 
these days winging it is the norm.  When 
he glances back, Scully's watching the 
musicians, too.  The residue of the smile 
still sits on her face, mixed with a wash 
of fatigue.

"Want some crackers while you're 
waiting?" he asks, raising his voice 
slightly to be heard over the music. The 
woman doesn't eat enough to keep a bird 
alive, and who knows what she's had 
today; food isn't as easy to come by as 
it was back in the day.  He places a 
bulging napkin on the table.  "Swiped 'em 
from a basket on the counter."  

She nods and reaches for them.  It's 
almost as if she's swaying slightly in 
time with the music.  The rhythm reminds 
him of the kind of thing he'd hear 
drifting into the streets of Cali back 
when he was playing courier, picking up 
batches of Marita's secret vaccine a 
couple of lifetimes ago.  

Two women make their way toward a little 
clearing in front of the musicians and 
start to dance.  Across from him, 
Scully's head bobs to the rhythm.  

He watches her, amused.  "You could go 
out there, too," he says finally, nodding 
toward the dancers.  

Her eyes widen and her sense of... 
whatever it is--the choke collar that 
never lets her stray far from being 
Little Miss Completely Serious--takes 
over.  He can see it coming: the 'I 
can't; I shouldn't'.  It would do her 
good to cut loose, to crawl out from 
under the low ceiling she's been living 
under.  For a little while, at least.  

"Lighten up for a few minutes, Scully.  
The weight of the world will still be 
waiting for you when you get back." 

She glances at the dancers, at the 
waitress leaning against the kitchen 
door--obviously not expecting any of her 
orders to come out soon--and back to the 
revelers.  Now five bodies are moving to 
the beat of the music.  

"Maybe I will," she says, and stands.  

He's surprised that she doesn't put up 
more of an argument.  He watches as she 
slips out of the booth and saunters 
toward the musicians.  Marita was tall 
enough not to seem awkward next to him, 
but Scully's such a tiny thing.  It never 
seemed so pronounced in his Bureau days, 
or when they'd crossed paths later, but 
now... Maybe it has something to do with 
the shoes; she always wore heels then.  
Now it's running shoes--that or the pair 
of cowboy boots she traded for a month 
back.

Or maybe it's her lack of official 
authority, the leveled-out playing field 
that makes her not loom quite as large as 
before.

He closes his eyes and leans back into 
the corner of the booth.  Mulder would be 
stoked to know that his theory was right-
-better yet, that it's likely to pay off 
big-time in lives saved.  

If luck deals them any kind of passable 
hand.  

Would have been nice if Mulder'd been 
around to see it.

Krycek rubs at the gritty dryness behind 
his eyelids and blinks in an attempt at 
lubrication.  He's surprised, when he 
opens his eyes, to see Scully standing at 
the edge of the table.

"Back already?"  

"It's gotten crowded."  She shrugs 
noncommittally, glancing toward the 
movement in the corner, but 
disappointment tints her face.  

It's true; the crowd has grown.  And now 
most of the dancers have paired off.      

"And you might get trampled?"  He cocks 
his head slightly.  "Or hit on?"

"I really have no desire to deal with 
that now."

"Well, then you shouldn't have to," he 
says, standing.  "Come on, I'll be your 
bodyguard."

She gives him a look, but her reserve is 
soon overcome by her obvious desire to 
give herself over to the music and she 
turns, leading the way toward the swaying 
bodies.

Within moments, the music ends.  Several 
men set to work lifting tables out of the 
way and Krycek and Scully dodge the 
moving obstacles.  Krycek is glad for the 
momentary reprieve.  He isn't sure what 
made him offer to do this; he's not 
really prepared.  When was the last time 
he did any dancing?  Before he hit 
twenty, when he was working the Moscow 
embassies for Petrovich?  

The music begins again, the tempo much 
slower this time.  All around them 
couples come together, arms on shoulders, 
arms or hands around waists.  He looks at 
Scully and shrugs; she takes a step 
toward him, one arm half-up, a question 
mark in the air.  

Then she's jostled closer.  Krycek 
reaches out instinctively to keep the 
closest bodies away.  She's so damn 
short.  "You could--"

Hell.

"You could... stand on my feet."  He 
pushes out the crazy-sounding words.  
Practically speaking, though, it's the 
easiest way to avoid the crush.

The eyebrow of skepticism rises 
immediately, and almost as immediately is 
joined by its mate.  "Krycek--"

He leans toward her, voice intimate.  
"What, too undignified for a dedicated 
agent of the Resistance?  Come on, 
Scully, you don't have to prove your 
seriousness to me."  He straightens up 
and nods toward the crowd around them.  
"They don't give a damn, either.  Anyway, 
you could use the height."

Another jostle from behind and she's 
nearly shoved against him.  Quickly she 
takes his offered hand, takes a tentative 
step up onto his right boot and after a 
moment's pause places her other foot on 
the left one.  She seems as far below him 
as ever, but what the hell.  

He takes a step with one foot, then 
shifts to the other, trying to work into 
the rhythm, attempting not to think about 
how he must look.  

"What's the matter, Krycek?" Scully asks.  
She looks faintly amused.  "Too 
undignified for a secret double agent 
working against occupation?"

He's about to sputter out a retort when 
Scully leans forward.  Her forehead 
pauses briefly against his chest.  

He swallows.

"This is... this is crazy, Krycek," her 
words rise from between them.  But when 
she looks up, there's a smile spread 
across her face, not the pain or fear or 
the sheer grim determination he's used to 
seeing there.

"Well, maybe"--he gives a slight shrug--
"maybe that's a good thing."

She pauses a moment, pondering, and he 
takes the opportunity to whirl her in a 
half-circle, then leans forward, tilting 
her away from him.  Her grip on his 
shoulder tightens and suddenly the smile 
returns, widens and morphs into laughter.

"What's so funny?" 

"This.  Us.  Everything."

Her cheeks are flushed, her expression 
warm and relaxed; it lights the shadowed 
corner of the room like a quiet fire 
spied through a frosty window.  

He shakes his head, spins her again.  
This time she leans back, hair falling 
away, laughter spilling out freely as if 
celebrating its release from rusty 
shackles.

He feels a smile pulling at the corners 
of his own mouth.  "Ready?" he says, and 
whirls her away through the crowd.

(end) 






  
          





